EMΣT | National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens, funded by the Hellenic Ministry of Culture & Sports, inaugurates the winter-spring programme in coincidence with the first changes introduced to the museum’s Collection Exhibition, in accordance with the institution’s new collection policy. These begin with a re-design as well as change of use on the fourth floor, where temporary exhibitions and in-depth solo exhibitions of artists from the museum’s collection will now be presented.
At the Center of the exhibition program is Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) a group exhibition curated by artistic director Katerina Gregos, that focuses on digital technology and its influence on intimate human relationships.
The subtitle of the exhibition is a reference to Eva Illouz’s book, Cold Intimacies: The Making of Emotional Capitalism, which argues that these relationships have become increasingly defined by economic and political models of bargaining, exchange, and equity. Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) explores the state of love and human bonds in the age of the Internet, social media, and high capitalism, probing how the digital sphere, the impact of technology giants, and neo-liberal practices have transformed love, social relations, and the way we interact with one another.
The accessibility of the Internet to an ever-greater number of people has had liberating effects, encouraging and empowering more open and diverse lifestyles, contributing to the dissolution of interpersonal orthodox conventions and social constrictions, and crumbling taboos and biases around gender and sexuality.
Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) looks at how the Internet has facilitated the expression of non-heteronormative sexual identities, especially in societies where queerness or non-binary sexuality are considered taboo, or even forbidden. It also explores the human pathologies associated with the commodification of emotion and the effects of digital dependency on relationships, as well as the issues that arise when the boundaries between the public and private, as well the virtual and the real, become more and more fluid. The Covid-19 pandemic and physical distancing have added yet another challenge to achieving fulfilling, intimate and meaningful human interaction.
At the same time, we also live in a time that philosopher Byung-Chul Han has labelled “emotional capitalism”, where human emotions have been co-opted by market forces. Thus, apart from offering an open and potentially endless sense of possibility, the dating supermarkets of Tinder and Grindr, “speed dating”, and the ease of Internet exchange have also hollowed out relationships and led to selfish or narcissistic forms of behaviour and the creation and curation of misleading images of the self, making it ever more difficult to establish what is real, meaningful, or true.
Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) is as much about individuals as it is about the systems of control that bind us together. Equally, it is about new societal patterns, investigating the challenges and possibilities that the Internet and social media present. It recognises love as a potent emotional force and intense psychological bond between people that gives meaning to our lives in ways that no other interaction, object, or experience can.
At a time of increasing alienation, individualism, and loneliness – symptoms of our world’s increasingly urbanised lifestyles – how can we reclaim meaningful intimate relationships? How can love be rescued from the claws of capitalism and the corporate technosphere? How can one resist the instrumentalisation of love, its superficialisation and banalisation by commerce and social media? Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) looks into the pathologies and problems afflicting love and matters of the heart and attempts to imagine a way out of our current alienation, emotional sterility, and loneliness.
At a time of increasing alienation, individualism, and loneliness – symptoms of our world’s increasingly urbanised lifestyles – how can we reclaim meaningful intimate relationships? How can love be rescued from the claws of capitalism and the corporate technosphere? How can one resist the instrumentalisation of love, its superficialisation and banalisation by commerce and social media? Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) looks into the pathologies and problems afflicting love and matters of the heart and attempts to imagine a way out of our current alienation, emotional sterility, and loneliness.
Works by Michael Karikis, Eleni Bagaki, Erica Scourti, Hannah Toticki, Melanie Bonajo, and an on-site installation by Dan Perjovschi, will be presented as solo exhibitions concomitantly in the temporary spaces in dialogue with the main exhibition. Their works focus on the impact on social relations and contemporary life of digital technology, the Internet, social media, and the economies they produce.
Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies), curated by Katerina Gregos
National Museum of Contemporary Art Athens (EMST), 15.12.2022 – 28.05.2023
Modern Love (or Love in the Age of Cold Intimacies) is accompanied by a bilingual (English-Greek) publication designed by Rafaela Drazic and edited by Katerina Gregos and Theophilos Tramboulis. A public programme with performances, talks, and screenings will kick off in the new year in collaboration with IMPAKT Media Organisation in the Netherlands.
Hannah Toticki, Everything, everywhere, all the time, Curated by Ioli Tzanetaki, until 28.05.2023
Eleni Bagaki, Something like a poem, a nude and flowers in a vase, Curated by Tina Pandi, until 7.05. 2023
Erica Scourti, Profiles of You, curated by Daphne Vitali, until 07.05.23
Mikhail Karikis, Because we are together, curated by Stamatis Schizakis, until 28.05.23
MELANIE BONAJO, Progress vs Regress, until 28.05.23
DAN PERJOVSCHI, The Long Wall Report, curated by Anna Mykoniati, until 29.10.23, Site-specific wall drawing, Foyer
images: (cover 1) Marge Monko,«Dear D», 2015 National Museum of Contemporary Art Athens (EMST), installation view, (detail) (2) Mavropoulou, McCarthy, McDonald, «pplkpr», 2015, National Museum of Contemporary Art Athens (EMS) Ph: Panos Kokkinias (3) Ariane Loze, «Our Cold Loves», 2022 (4) De Roover, «If you need me I ll be pretending things will be different this time», 2019 (5) Candice Breitz,«TLDR», 2017 (6) Gabriel Abrantes, «The Artificial Humors», 2016 (7) Margaret Salmon, «You Me We Us», 2018 (8) Melanie Bonajo-Night Soil – Economy of Love,2015